Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of the Pontifical Academy for Life, has written a new book reflecting on old age and highlighting how this time of life can serve as a time for inner growth. Source: CNA.
Archbishop Paglia’s book is titled Destinati alla vita, which translates to Destiny for Life.
In an excerpt published by the Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano, Archbishop Paglia, 79, praises Pope Francis’ work to honour the elderly and their importance in our lives throughout his papacy, especially in the establishment of the World Day of Grandparents and the Elderly.
“Pope Francis has taken up the spiritual challenge of old age … As a Pope he developed his teaching even more, to the point of establishing a special liturgical feast to celebrate his grandparents,” Archbishop Paglia wrote.
“But it is through the specific catechesis on the subject that he proposed a more articulated and comprehensive help to the elderly in particular the believers, but not only – so that they face this last age of life as a time of grace, an appropriate time, a time of growth even if the body becomes fragile.”
“The years of old age lead to the fulfillment of every personal existence. We do not walk in the void and aimlessly at the mercy of fate,” he said.
Speaking about the COVID-19 pandemic, Archbishop Paglia emphasised that this experience we endured served as a reminder that we are all fragile – not just the elderly.
He also touched on an “anti-age ideology” that “has led to a deep fracture between generations.”
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Archbishop Paglia writes new book about old age as a ‘time for inner growth’ (By Francesca Pollio Fenton, CNA)